A hot new theory is being passed around for why the market crashed last month

The markets went haywire last week, and Wall Street has a hot new theory for why.

Numerous investors have pointed to what are called risk parity funds and commodity-trading advisers (CTA) as being partly to blame.

Risk parity funds build portfolios around risks: They target a certain exposure to volatility, rather than, say, equities or bonds. That means that when volatility spikes, they sell automatically and indiscriminately.

CTAs meanwhile are typically trend followers, meaning they buy when others are buying and sell when others are selling.

Cooperman said in a Tuesday letter to investors that events in China and the potential for a US rate hike didn't explain the "magnitude and velocity" of the market decline. Instead he blames systematic and technical investors.

The idea that these funds exacerbated the historic volatility of the past two weeks has been gaining traction over the past few days.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch said in a note on Thursday that "risk parity funds and CTA's are currently in the spotlight."

JPMorgan said in a note last week that most of the selling last week was led by these systematic investors.

The note said: "These likely included derivative hedgers and price insensitive investors like CTAs, risk parity funds and other funds that target volatility. These flows exacerbate price action as derivatives hedging causes higher market volatility which puts selling pressure on risk parity portfolio and induces further selling by trend followers. We don't expect a period of prolonged stress as market volatility normalizes and these technical flows subside."